Tiger Woods has confirmed his relationship with the former daughter-in-law of President Donald Trump, publishing two images to social media in a post that said, “Love is in the air.”
Woods and Vanessa Trump, who was married to Donald Trump Jr., had been seen at Torrey Pines in San Diego along with her daughter, Kai, when Woods arrived for the final round to hand out the trophy to the winner of the Genesis Invitational. He is the tournament host.
Kai Trump goes to the Benjamin School with Woods’ two children, Sam and Charlie. She and Charlie competed on an invitation at a high-profile junior golf tournament this week.
“Love is in the air and life is better with you by my side! We look forward to our journey through life together,” Woods said on X, where he has 6.4 million followers.
He added: “At this time we would appreciate privacy for all those close to our hearts.”
One photo shows Woods and Vanessa Trump posing together, another with them lying in a hammock with her arm draped across his chest as he gazes skyward.
Woods and Vanessa Trump had been featured in gossip outlets for the last several weeks. She was married to Donald Trump Jr. for 12 years. They had five children together.
Woods announced March 11 that he ruptured his left Achilles tendon, knocking him out of the Masters and likely for the rest of the year.
It was not clear what prompted Woods, who keeps his personal life fiercely private, to publish photos confirming the relationship. It was reminiscent of 2013, when he and Lindsey Vonn both posted photos of them together to confirm they were dating.
Woods said at the time he and Vonn “wanted to limit the ‘stalkarazzi’ and all those sleazy websites that are out there following us,” saying it could lead to dangerous situations involving his children. He also said their photos would devalue anything the paparazzi had.
Woods has two children from his marriage to Elin Nordegren, who divorced him 2010 after he had been exposed for multiple extramarital affairs.
His only other public relationship was with Erica Herman, which lasted about seven years until he ended it in October 2022. It was a messy split, and Herman eventually dismissed lawsuits against Woods and the trust that owns his south Florida estate, where she had been living.
Miller Gardner, the teenage son of New York Yankees player Brett Gardner, has died. He was 14.
Brett, 41, and his wife, Jessica Gardner, shared a statement on X on Sunday, March 23, announcing that their son died unexpectedly amid a getaway with loved ones.
“With heavy hearts, we are saddened to announce the passing of our youngest son, Miller. He was 14 years old and has left us far too soon after falling ill along with several other family members while on vacation,” the couple began.
“We have so many questions and so few answers at this point, but we do know that he passed away peacefully in his sleep on the morning of Friday, March 21st,” they continued.
The pair then described Miller as “a beloved son and brother,” adding, “We cannot yet comprehend our life without his infectious smile.”
“He loved football, baseball, golf, hunting, fishing, his family and his friends. He lived life to the fullest every single day,” Brett and Jessica continued.
The couple — who wed in 2007 and are also parents to another son, Hunter Gardner — next expressed their gratitude to “all who have reached out to offer support and encouragement during this difficult time.”
“We are confident our faith, family, and friends will help us navigate this unimaginable loss. Our prayers go out to Miller’s teammates and friends, as well as to all other families who have lost a child far too soon as we share their grief,” they concluded. “Please respect our wishes for privacy as we mourn and search for healing.”
The couple did not detail where they were on vacation at the time of the incident, or the cause of death for their son.
Gardner is an outfielder who spent the entirety of his 14-year Major League Baseball (MLB) career with the Yankees. His playing career ended after the 2021 season, though he didn’t officially announce his retirement.
An Orthodox Jewish passenger says a United Airlines pilot forcibly removed him from an airplane bathroom while he was experiencing constipation, exposing his genitalia to other flyers during a flight from Tulum, Mexico, to Houston.
Yisroel Liebb, of New Jersey, described his trip through allegedly unfriendly skies in a federal lawsuit this week against the airline and the US Department of Homeland Security, whose officers he said boarded the plane upon landing and took him away in handcuffs.
Liebb and a fellow Orthodox Jewish traveler said they were forced to miss a connecting flight to New York City while US Customs and Border Protection officers paraded them through an airport terminal, placed them in holding cells and searched their luggage.
“CBP Officers responded to reports of a disturbance on a flight at the request of the airline,” said Hilton Beckham, the CBP assistant commissioner for public affairs. “Due to the ongoing litigation, we are unable to provide any further comment.”
United Airlines declined to comment. A message seeking comment was left for a lawyer representing Liebb and the other traveler, Jacob Sebbag.
In the lawsuit, filed Wednesday in Manhattan federal court, Liebb said he had been in the bathroom in the back of the plane for about 20 minutes on 28 January when a flight attendant woke Sebbag from a nap and asked Sebbag to check on him.
Liebb said he explained his gastrointestinal predicament and assured Sebbag that he would be out soon. Sebbag then relayed that to the flight attendant, the lawsuit says.
About 10 minutes later, with Liebb still indisposed, the pilot approached Sebbag and asked him to check on Liebb, the lawsuit says. The pilot then yelled at Liebb to leave the bathroom immediately, the lawsuit says.
Liebb said he told the pilot that he was finishing up and would be out momentarily.
The pilot responded by breaking the lock, forcing the bathroom door open and pulling Liebb out with his pants still around his ankles, exposing his genitalia to Sebbag, flight attendants and nearby passengers, according to the lawsuit.
“The pilot became visibly enraged, broke the lock on the door and forced the door to the bathroom open, pulling Liebb out of the bathroom with his pants still around his ankles, exposing his genitalia to Sebbag, several flight attendants, and the nearby passengers on the plane,” the lawsuit said.
It added that Lieb said he felt “sexually violated and embarrassed after having been publicly exposed in the nude”.
“With Sebbag leading Liebb, the pilot proceeded to repeatedly push the [two] back to their seats while making threats of getting [them] arrested and making scathing remarks about their Judaism, and how ‘Jews act’,” the lawsuit continued.
After the two-hour flight landed in Houston, the men said about a half-dozen Customs and Border Protection officers boarded and escorted them off the plane.
Liebb said when he asked why they were being detained, an officer tightened his handcuffs and responded: “This isn’t county or state. We are homeland. You have no rights here.”
The men said United booked them on a flight to New York City the next day for free, but any savings from the complimentary tickets were lost because they had to pay for an overnight hotel stay and food during their delay.
The two men said that the handcuffs caused “severe wrist pain” that “persisted for days afterwards”.
A fire broke out near the French Pavilion at Disney World in Florida on Saturday evening, sending billows of black smoke into the sky
The fire at Walt Disney World Resort’s Epcot theme park near Orlando, Florida, started backstage of the France Pavilion. That section at Epcot is located within the park’s World Showcase,
A former federal prosecutor was found dead Saturday morning at a home in Alexandria, Virginia, authorities said.
Officers with the Alexandria Police Department were dispatched to the home at 9:18 a.m. Eastern Time on a report of an unresponsive woman.
They arrived to find 43-year-old Jessica Aber, former U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, dead at the scene, police reported. It was not immediately clear if the home belonged to Aber, or who had contacted police.
Her cause of death will be determined by the Virginia medical examiner’s office. No further details were provided.
Police said in a statement that “as a matter of protocol, an investigation is underway surrounding the circumstances of her death.”
Then-President Joe Biden nominated Aber to the position in August 2021, and she was unanimously confirmed by the Senate.
She led the department for approximately three years, resigning in January when President Trump began his second term.
“We are heartbroken beyond words to learn of the passing of our friend and former colleague, U.S. Attorney Jessica Aber,” her successor, Erik Siebert, the current U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, said in a statement Saturday. “She was unmatched as a leader, mentor, and prosecutor, and she is simply irreplaceable as a human being. We remain in awe of how much she accomplished in her all too brief time in this world.”
In a social media post, Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares praised Aber for her work with Ceasefire Virginia, a statewide initiative implemented in 2022 designed to combat violent crime.
“I am saddened to learn of the passing of Jessica Aber, whose career of public service included US Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia and whose work with Ceasefire Virginia saved more lives than we may ever realize,” Miyares wrote.
Aber worked in private practice before joining the Eastern District of Virginia in 2009, where she held several roles, including assistant U.S. attorney and deputy chief of the department’s criminal division, according to her biography on the Justice Department’s website.
As U.S. attorney, she oversaw a staff of about 300 people in a district that serves approximately six million residents.
A Virginia native, Aber did her undergraduate work at the University of Richmond, and received her law degree from William & Mary Law School in 2006.
Foreman was a two-time heavyweight boxing champion and Olympic gold medalist. In later years, he became the spokesperson for the George Foreman Grill, which sold millions of units. He was known as Big George.
“Our hearts are broken. With profound sorrow, we announce the passing of our beloved George Edward Foreman Sr. who peacefully departed on March 21, 2025 surrounded by loved ones. A devout preacher, a devoted husband, a loving father, and a proud grand and great grandfather, he lived a life marked by unwavering faith, humility, and purpose,” the statement read.
In 1949, Foreman was born in Texas. He grew up in Houston. “I grew up in the Fifth Ward of Houston — the Bloody Fifth, we called it. Every weekend someone got killed,” he told Esquire in 2006. He dropped out of high school at 15 and got involved in minor crimes because his family was poor. But when he was 16 years old, he joined the Job Corps, where he learned how to build bricks and carpentry and earned his GED. During that time he also began training as a boxer.
“I went into boxing at the age of 17 to lose weight and become a great street fighter,” he told Ringside Report in 2000. “Next thing I know, I was fighting as a Golden Glover. It basically all happened as an accident.”
Foreman won a gold medal at the 1968 Olympic Games in Mexico City when he was 19 years old. He told the boxing radio show On the Ropes in 2023, “Winning that gold medal at the end, I wanted the whole world to know where I was from, so I picked up a small American flag and paraded around the ring to make sure they knew.” “This was my chance to represent my country. That was more important to me than winning a boxing match. The next year, Foreman went professional. He won all 13 fights that year and all 12 fights in 1970. With 32 victories and no losses by the end of 1971, he was the world’s best challenger and was expected to fight World Heavyweight Champion Joe Frazier for the title. The two finally fought in 1973’s The Sunshine Showdown, which Foreman won by total knockout. “I didn’t fear anyone except Joe Frazier,” Foreman admitted in a 2023 interview with Andscape. “Before I ever fought for the title, I hoped something would have happened to him.”
“I’ve never told anyone this, but that was the happiest time of my life in boxing because I worked so hard to fulfill my dream and become heavyweight champion,” Foreman explained. “It was the first and last moment I felt that.”
Foreman defended his title against José Roman and Ken Norton. In a historic fight known as “the Rumble in the Jungle,” which is believed to have been the most watched live television broadcast of all time, he squared off against Muhammad Ali in 1974. Ali, a massive underdog, defeated Foreman.
Through the years, Foreman told different versions of the event, at times alleging that the fight was fixed for Ali. He was disappointed that they never met again.
“For years afterwards I would agonize, ‘How could this happen?’” he told Vogue Man Arabia in 2019. “That night I lost everything I ever was. It was the most devastating event in my life as an athlete. I was not even a man no more.” But he and Ali eventually became friends.
Foreman continued to fight. He retired from boxing in 1977, and after a near-death experience after his last match, became a born-again Christian.
But 10 years later, amid financial difficulties, Foreman returned to boxing at the age of 38. “It was like, I did it once, I’m gonna have to do it again,” Foreman told USA Today in 2023. “It was the only profession I knew. Sometimes I wished I’d been a golfer, it’s much easier than boxing.”
Foreman received title shots against Evander Holyfield in 1991 and Tommy Morrison in 1993, but lost both. But in 1994 he beat Michael Moorer and reclaimed his championship.
“When you fight for the heavyweight championship of the world it does feel unbelievable, it doesn’t feel like you’re really there, it could be a dream,” he told Boxing Newsin 2023. “‘You’re going to wake up soon, you don’t belong in the ring with these guys.’ The second time around, I could deal with all those thoughts. It was a special moment, more so than when I won the fight with Frazier.”
As he succeeded once again in the ring, he also started to make more public appearances and became a celebrity, even starring in a short-lived sitcom George. Foreman retired from boxing for good in 1999. He finished his career with 76 wins and five losses.
In 1994, Foreman launched the George Foreman Grill. To date it has been so successful that well over 100 million grills have been sold. “My attorney came to me and said, ‘George, you’re making other people wealthy, why don’t you make yourself wealthy?'” Foreman told PEOPLE in 2003. “And he told me about this grill.”
Foreman competed on The Masked Singer in 2022. He also executive produced the 2023 biopic Big George Foreman: The Miraculous Story of the Once and Future Heavyweight Champion of the World,
Foreman had 12 children: Natalia, Leola, Michi, Isabella, Courtney, Georgetta and Freeda (who died in 2019) and five sons all named George Edward Foreman.
Nature of examination not uncovered, yet strikes follow charges of sex offenses, including dealing, made by ex.
US government specialists have assaulted two homes having a place with hip-jump star Sean “Diddy” Brushes.
Division of Country Security authorities affirmed on Monday that they had directed searches of the music magnate’s homes in Los Angeles and Miami.
The examination is being driven by Country Security Examinations (HSI) specialists in New York, where a claim was documented against Brushes by a previous sweetheart last year, blaming him for sex dealing.
Music magnate and business visionary Sean ‘Diddy’ Brushes faces a few claims charging rape
In an explanation gave to the Reuters news organization, HSI didn’t expand on the idea of its examination. In any case, it has ward to explore the unlawful development of individuals, products, cash, innovation and booty, including sex dealing.
R&B entertainer Cassandra Ventura sued Brushes in government court in Manhattan in November, blaming him for exposing her to actual maltreatment, sexual bondage and assault during a 10-year expert and close connection.
The suit refered to infringement of sex dealing and illegal exploitation resolutions under government, New York state and California regulations.
Ventura and Brushes – who has involved such monikers as P Diddy, Puff Daddy and Diddy – reported the following day they had settled the case under classified terms.
Brushes, 54, has said that he is honest and his informers were looking for “a fast payday”.
Ventura’s court activity made the way for different claims, raising charges of rape and assault against Brushes from different offended parties.
In December, Brushes denied the most recent common grumbling, which blamed him for partaking in the assault of a teen whom he organized to fly from Detroit to New York quite a while back,
TV channels in Los Angeles conveyed airborne video film showing HSI specialists and other policing assaulting Brushes’ bequest in the city’s upscale Holmby Slopes area.
Los Angeles City News Administration detailed a few group were confined external the home, yet it was muddled whether any captures were made.
Nearby media sources revealed that government specialists likewise executed a court order at the rap big shot’s Miami-region home.
Film showed officials going all through his property on Miami Ocean side’s Star Island with specialists conveying a case of material from the home.
Brushes’ whereabouts during the strikes were not known.
A significant Baltimore span imploded early Tuesday after it was hit by an enormous holder transport.
Six individuals were absent after the impact at the Francis Scott Key Scaffold, as indicated by Paul Wiedefeld, Maryland’s transportation secretary. Two individuals were protected, with one shipped to an ER in difficult condition. The missing individuals might have fallen into the water.
The scaffold conveys Highway 695 across the Patapsco Waterway, southeast of the Baltimore metropolitan region.
The accident by the huge holder transport happened around 1:30 a.m. ET, when workers for hire were dealing with the scaffold, as per Wiedefeld. The missing individuals are accepted to be the development team who were fixing potholes on the scaffold.
Wiedefeld said the occurrence is a functioning pursuit and salvage mission and that vessel traffic into and out of the Port of Baltimore is suspended until additional notification.
“This is an exceptionally enormous occurrence, it includes an extremely huge impression,” Baltimore City Local group of fire-fighters Boss James W. Wallace said in a press preparation.
The Public Transportation Wellbeing Board sent off a group to explore the breakdown, a representative told .
Sonar filters distinguished the presence of lowered vehicles, yet couldn’t reveal the quantity of vehicles included, the local group of fire-fighters boss said.
“The most recent data we have on the team of the boat is that they actually are ready of the boat,” Wallace said, adding that salvage specialists should initially cause a harm evaluation of the vessel prior to having the option to board. Inquired as to whether the boat was experiencing any specialized debilitations, he said, “We don’t have that data.”
Maryland authorities and the FBI said there is no data to propose the breakdown was a consequence of illegal intimidation.
“The starter examination focuses to a mishap,” said Maryland Gov. Wes Moore. “We haven’t seen any solid proof of a psychological militant assault.”
Finished in 1977, the scaffold took the name of Francis Scott Key, whose sonnet was the groundwork of the U.S. public song of devotion.
Around 35,000 individuals utilize the scaffold consistently, as indicated by Wiedefeld. Drivers in the space should utilize the far-more occupied Baltimore Harbor and Post McHenry passages to cross the harbor for years to come.
Moore said the need presently is on search and salvage, however that the remaking of the extension will be a drawn out project.
“We will ensure that this isn’t simply reconstructed, yet that we will remake such that recollects individuals who this misfortune has influenced,” Moore said.
The path taken by quarterback Stetson Bennett to the NFL has not been straightforward. He started off as a walk-on for Georgia before moving to junior college, returning to Georgia, and then helping the Bulldogs win back-to-back national titles in the College Football Playoff in the 2021 and 2022 seasons. Bennett, a contender for the 2022 Heisman Trophy, performed well enough during his senior year at Georgia to earn a spot in the 2023 NFL Draught as the 128th overall pick in the fourth round.
His career as a professional football player is currently on hold after the Rams on Wednesday added him on the reserve/non-football injured list. That indicates that he is not participating in team activities for an unspecified cause that is unrelated to an on-field accident. Additionally, the group made a significant acquisition at the quarterback position byBrett Rypien was added to the 53-man roster as Matthew Stafford’s backup, according to Jonathan Jones of CBS Sports NFL Insider.
Bennett’s predicament is “bigger than football,” according to Sean McVay, the head coach of the Rams, who declined to discuss it in detail during his team’s news conference on Wednesday.
When questioned about Bennett’s situation, McVay responded, “I’m not going to have any follow-up information or anything that I will offer in that area. I sincerely hope you will abide by my requests and maintain that within the company. I am aware that you have a task to accomplish, but there are certain matters that are somewhat more significant than the particulars and intricacies. I ask that you leave it there so that we can keep it inside.
When questioned about how Bennett’s absence may affect the quarterback room behind the 35-year-old Stafford, McVay immediately reverted to his standard response that Bennett’s predicament was more serious than football.
“I think there are some things a lot bigger than that,” McVay stated in reference to the Rams’ quarterback room issue. “Brett Rypien has been working for us internally, which is great for us. He is a member of our scout team. In the absence of any developments about Bennett’s condition, he will remain the backup he served as last week. We are now in such situation.
When asked how the quarterback room behind the 35-year-old Stafford may be affected by Bennett’s absence, McVay instantly resorted to his typical statement that Bennett’s situation was more important than football.
Regarding the Rams’ quarterback room issue, McVay said, “I think there are some things a lot bigger than that.” It’s excellent for us that Brett Rypien has been working for us inside. He belongs to our scout team. Bennett will continue to be the backup he was last week if there are no changes in his health. Such a circumstance exists right now.
Jonathan Kolb, general manager of the New York Liberty, has been awarded the 2023 WNBA Executive of the Year. Kolb just put together a superteam that is eight victories away from winning the first WNBA title in club history.
The award was chosen by the 12 league executives; no one was permitted to vote for themselves. Kolb garnered six first-place votes; Greg Bibb of Dallas and Darius Taylor of Connecticut both received numerous first-place votes (two each).
With the help of a historic offseason in which New York acquired the 2021 MVP Jonquel Jones in a three-team trade and signed 2018 MVP Breanna Stewart and seven-time WNBA assists leader Courtney Vandersloot as free agents, the Liberty went from barely making the playoffs to being a title contender in a year.
The Liberty, who tied the reigning champion Las Vegas Aces 2-2 in the regular-season series but finished two games behind in the standings, have established themselves as championship contenders with the addition of Jones, Stewart, and Vandersloot, 2020 No. 1 draught pick Sabrina Ionescu, and 2021 All-Star Betnijah Laney.
Given where the Liberty were in their rebuilding process, the availability of a player like Jones on the trade market, and the unrestricted free agency of Stewart and Vandersloot, already regarded as two all-time greats, Kolb said this week on ESPN that New York’s offseason was a “confluence of events that will probably never happen again.”
The club has stated that Stewart and Vandersloot’s willingness to accept pay considerably below the supermax contract in order to go to Brooklyn is an example of the collective sacrifice they have all made in order to win a championship. The Liberty are the only WNBA club still in existence that has never taken home a championship.
Kolb foresaw the possibilities of the haul early last year and carried it through effectively this summer. Ionescu, Laney, and sixth woman Kayla Thornton signed multiyear contract extensions during the regular season, and Kolb guaranteed their return, so the future also appears promising.
At the time, Kolb said, “it was really exciting for us to capitalise on it.” “You prepare for those situations and you hope that it will turn out the way you want it to, both with that happening and those players showing up, but also that it will work on the court.”
With a 32-8 record, the Liberty have the greatest winning percentage in club history (.800), a dramatic improvement following a 2-20 season in 2020 under Ionescu.sustained an ankle injury that ended his season early. The Liberty won their first title of any kind in August by defeating the Aces in the Commissioner’s Cup final.
It has been very fantastic to witness how hard everyone has worked to stay committed to that buy-in, according to Kolb. The finest gift of all is that everyone is who they claim to be.
The Liberty’s current success dates back to 2019, when Joe Tsai and Clara Wu Tsai acquired the storied but unsuccessful organisation that had been sending games to Westchester County. Following Kolb’s hiring, the front office attempted to relocate the team to Brooklyn, increase its visibility in the community, and establish it as a destination franchise with first-rate facilities and lodgings, an enlarged performance staff, and other resources not frequently found in the WNBA.
Regarding the franchise’s expansion, Kolb remarked, “I think this is right on time with our plan that we had in place.” Plans don’t always work out the way you had planned, but this one did, and we couldn’t be happier about it.
At 7:30 p.m. ET on Friday, the second-seeded Liberty welcome the seventh-seeded Washington Mystics to their home court.
Since 2015, New York hasn’t won a playoff series, and it hasn’t made it to the WNBA Finals since 2002. The Liberty, however, have a large number of players with extensive championship experience; Stewart won the WNBA championship in 2018 and 2020 (earning Finals MVP both years), Vandersloot won in 2021, and Jones had part in two Finals campaigns in 2019 and 2022.
Kolb remarked, “You’ve got a lot of postseason experience, especially among our starting guys. They are prepared to attack the task collectively and they are aware of what it is.